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Rachael Goldsworthy Realty

Sales | Rentals | Strata

Countdown til the end of your Financial Year

29 June, 2012 · Posted by Rachael Goldsworthy

Are you ready for the end of the Financial Year? What was your best deductable item this year? Why not share your best tips for the readers.

Ross Greenwood spends his Money Minute with you. Copy and paste this link to your search bar to view:-

http://bit.ly/NHPx3f

Happy Spending,
Rachael 🙂

Filed Under: Real Estate

Shop fronts vs virtual offices

20 June, 2012 · Posted by Rachael Goldsworthy

Listings websites let potential buyers search for properties with just a mouse click, so are the days of the physical office numbered? Real Estate Business’ Stacey Moseley investigates.

Shane Evans operates a real estate business, but not as some of us know it.

His company, Finesse Property, located on the Gold Coast, is a virtual office, and that suits Mr Evans just fine.

“I don’t believe a shop front is a necessity for my business,” Mr Evans said. “The proof is in the pudding: this year alone I have sold 14 properties in 14 weeks.”

“According to statistics, there is a 96 per cent chance a buyer will look at an online source before they buy a home. People aren’t walking into offices anymore.”

Mat Steinwede, principal of McGrath Central Coast and Mat Steinwede Pty Ltd, agrees. In a recent blog, he told his subscribers that the internet has taken the place of the window display.

“Gone are the days when a buyer will walk around from real estate office to real estate office and register their name,” he blogged on matsteinwede.com. “Buyers don’t even want to go into an office at all. They want to look on the internet, or flick through the paper themselves or go to an open home.

“Technology has made it very easy for buyers to sit in their home and search through all properties available, from all agents.”

Case Study – Mark Shorrock, Sales Manager, Ray White Bellbowrie

YEARS AGO, before internet advertising came of age, I worked at my parents’ LJ Hooker office, which was located in a prominent position in Palm Beach, on the Gold Coast. At the time, there was a high volume of enquiries coming from the display window.

My dad’s old saying was, “Ducks on the pond”, which meant someone was browsing the office window and the rostered salesperson on duty was to approach them.

I have also more recently worked in a dominant agency in Brisbane, and they had no shop front to speak of. This office outperformed all the other agencies in the area.

Most of the competition held strategic shop front positions on main streets or secondary arterial roads and shopping centres, but even with this exposure they couldn’t match the traffic at the agency at which I worked.

More recently, the Brisbane floods forced the company I now work for – Ray White Bellbowrie – to operate from a residential address until a new shopping centre was built. Because of this, I now work as the sales manager from my own home office, and I don’t see this as a problem. Very few of our clients have raised this setup as a problem, either.

With the amount of time people spend on their smartphones, tablets and PCs to search for property, online is king. The modern buyer sets foot in fewer properties than they used to and the days when I put a potential buyer in my car to show them around are virtually gone.

How times have changed. My research shows that here in Bellbowrie, approximately 85 per cent to 90 per cent of all buyer enquiries come via the internet.

The office, as we currently know it, will eventually be broken up into small satellite offices.

They will be like small business hubs containing minimal staff and equipment to conduct the bare essentials of administration and clerical duties, and the agents and property managers will operate remotely to maximise productivity.

This will provide the opportunity for savvy real estate business owners to increase the scope of their territories. You may even see more offices utilising the services of virtual offices, where licensees from different franchise groups will lease office space, and staff form virtual offices alongside larger independents in a bid to cut staff costs.

This post courtesy of Stacey Moseley at Real Estate Business Bulletin – thanks Stacey

Filed Under: Real Estate Tagged With: real estate, shop fronts vs virtual offices, stacey moseley real estate business

Disruptive Wonder for a Change

3 June, 2012 · Posted by Rachael Goldsworthy

I recently had the pleasure of watching Kelli Anderson share her ideas of disruptive and clever designs.  Kelli says she “likes to find the hidden talents of everyday things. Reject normal order and by messing things up and rearranging the pieces we can expand our notion of what we demand from reality.”

Debra Oakland reports “She presents three brillant displays of this disruption and how it changes and improves things we love.  From wedding invitations to Utopian newspapers, Kelli re-designs commonplace objects to go beyond their ordinary functions and create surprising experiences.

If we had the courage to think creatively outside the box to this extent, there is no end to what we could accomplish.”

“No problem can be solved by the same consciousness that created it.  We need to see the world anew.” Albert Einstein.

I would love to hear what you have accomplished by looking at things with Disruptive Wonder.

Rachael 🙂

When you have a cup of coffee click this link and enjoy.

source:  TEDxPhoenix/TEDxTalks and Debra Oakland – thank you.

Filed Under: Real Estate, Videos Tagged With: Courage, Debra Oakland, inspiration, Kellie Anderson, Living in courage Online, rachael goldsworthy, rachael goldsworthy realty, TedxPhoenix

QR Revolution

2 June, 2012 · Posted by Rachael Goldsworthy

QR codesInteractive Marketing for your Property

Have you seen those black-and-white, futuristic-looking squares a lot lately? Not sure what they are?

They are called QR Codes, short for Quick Response, and are really just a sophisticated barcode that can store virtually any type of data. When scanned (usually through a smart phone), they can link to a webpage, an email message, a map, contact details, a Buy Now link, and more. You can even brand any kind of physical object. This is nicknamed ‘hardlinking’.

While they come from Toyota’s manufacturing ingenuity, Quick Response codes are now popular everywhere because they suit “the new consumer” and our modern buyer behaviour. We are time-poor and experience seeking. We live in a culture where digital communication is the order of the day. We want information to be immediate.

This makes QR codes perfect tool for property marketing.

Imagine. You’re walking your dog along a pretty street in your neighbourhood. You see a house for sale. It looks great from the outside, but what’s it really like.

There is a QR code on the bottom of the For Sale sign, so you pull out your phone, scan it, and automatically begin experiencing a virtual tour. By the time you get home, you’ve decided it’s just what you want and you’ve emailed or texted the agent to inspect it in person. Essentially, that two-dimensional For Sale sign has become an interactive billboard.

It isn’t just property buyers who benefit, it is also the vendors. It takes time and emotional energy to continually open your home to potential buyers, only to have them dismiss the property over something basic.

QR codes provide prospective buyers easy access to information, floor plans, photos and video, even when they are not at home on their computer. Your buyer may be walking or driving past, or in a coffee shop reading a local guide. There’s no more need to try to remember the website address or the agent’s name. This convenience gives you a wider net and means that those coming through your house are more likely to be ‘qualified’ prospects.

If you’re a very motivated seller, you could even get a T-shirt made up with the QR code to your property! You will see these codes more and more.

Rachael has been using QR codes since the beginning of 2012 on all marketing communications for property.

Filed Under: Featured Articles Tagged With: property marketing, QR codes, real estate

Autumn Feast at Mt. Tomah Food & Wine Festival

5 May, 2012 · Posted by Rachael Goldsworthy

Looking for something to do this weekend? For more information click the link below.

Autumn Feast at Mt Tomah Food and Wine Festival – TomahROMA

Locally grown produce, craft stalls, wine tasting, international cuisines and a freshly brewed tea or coffee on the offer.

For more information visit www.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au

See you there, don’t forget your warm clothes, it is about 10 degrees cooler up the mountain.

Rachael 🙂

Filed Under: Community Update, Events, Featured Articles, Fun Days Tagged With: Autumn Feast, Blue Mountains, giftware, Hakesbury, Kurrajong Handspun Crafts, Mount Tomah Food and Wine Festival - TomahROMA, Mount Tomah Rural Fire Service, Mt. Tomah, rachael goldsworthy, real estate, real estate agent hawkesbury, Sydney MOrning Herald Autumn of The Arts Program, TomahROMA, www.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au Blue Mountains Botanic Garden

Have you got your money under control or do “You Need a Budget™”?

26 April, 2012 · Posted by Rachael Goldsworthy

I have been asked lots of questions over the years as to what is the best way to save a deposit to purchase a home.  Whilst I am not a financial adviser and am not providing any financial advice to you, I am happy to share the methods I have utilised to save deposits to purchase property over the last two decades.  You may not agree with everything I say however perhaps if you can take the concept and mould that idea into something that you feel you could see working for you, that is great.

Like anything there are many ways to achieve goals however you must first succinctly identify as to what it is you want to achieve.  Put your goal in writing and then break that goal down to a step by step process as to how you will achieve this goal.

For example let’s say, you want to buy a house worth $350,000.  Therefore you will need 10% of $350,000 which equals $35,000.

Next question is when do you want to buy the house, let’s say you said two years.  You then divide the $35,000 by by 104 weeks = $336.54 per week savings required.

At this point you can either say I earn enough money to be able to save this amount above and beyond my weekly expenses or say, gee that is a bit much I might have to revisit my goals and perhaps take three or four years to complete your goal.  You might even consider purchasing a more affordable home to reduce the amount you need to save and time as to which it will take to achieve this goal.

If you are like a considerably high proportion of the population and are not disciplined to be able to save money on a regular basis you may need a little help with technology.  There are some great Apps and Software Programs that make it easier to become more accountable to achieve savings and can even make it fun. 

Whilst I am not endorsing the product some friends of mine are using one App in particular called “You Need a Budget™”.   They say they find it really helpful to keep them on track with their savings and daily expenditure and it is apparently simple to use for even the most technologically challenged 🙂  You can download on your Mac or PC …but wait there is more, no free steak knives however there is a free 34 day trial http://youneedabudget.com

Another handy option available through your financial institution is that you are able to set up direct debits from your nominated bank accounts, on whatever payment cycle and whatever amount you prefer.  Therefore your savings are always deducted from your account first and what you have left in your pay is what you have to live off, rather than spending your pay and saying I have nothing left to save this week. 

I find that once you get started on a savings regime, the less you have the less you need. 

What have you got to lose other than a little time and an opportunity to accelerate your savings to buy your first home, pay off your credit card, go on that family holiday, or whatever that goal is for you. 

I would love to hear your best saving tips, so please feel free to post a comment and I will publish for the readers.

Happy saving.

Rachael 🙂

Filed Under: Featured Articles, Real Estate Tagged With: Apps, banks, budget, direct debits, direct deposits, financial institutions, get ahead, goal, goals, money, poor, rachael goldsworthy, rachael goldsworthy realty, real estate, real estate agent hawkesbury, saving, savings regime, Software Programs, Windsor, you need a budget

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